cliffhanger407
New Member
Imagine on a hot day in the summer of Atlanta with the garage already at 100F in the shade and you start a supercharging session and it blows hot air towards a sprinkler for 20+ minutes.
Is the air coming from that cabinet over 200F worst case?
Fire sprinkler - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia shows temps needed to trigger, I'm assuming that what you have there is white banded green alcohol
Funny unrelated story: I went to Marlow's Tavern about a year ago for lunch and sat on the patio. Since it was chilly, they had heaters that were newly installed on their patio, and we could now sit out there in the somewhat cold. 10 minutes after sitting down, a pop followed by a loud hiss--and then getting drenched with sprinkler water.
Hopefully Tesla's supercharger network has better engineers than a restaurant, but it's obviously possible to overlook something like this.